Showing posts with label Peter Abrahams young adult fiction review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Abrahams young adult fiction review. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Bad Boy - Dream Jordan

Bad Boy by Dream Jordan
Kate has been in the foster care system for a few years. The reader was first introduced to Kate in Jordan's debut Hot Girl. By the end Kate was living was a loving couple that wanted her in their home, leaving the tough girl persona behind. In this continuation Kate must return to a group home due to unfortunate circumstances.

When the novel opens Kate is leaving Bed- Stuy for her new foster home in Ocean Parkway. In this new old setting Kate is tested on a daily basis. The other girls don't like Kate and do everything they can to push her buttons.

Bad Boy is set throughout Brooklyn and Kate knows her borough well but still has no one to lean on. Until Percy, a very handsome guy she thought was out of her league, comes along. Everything starts off well between the two, soon Percy's complements are followed by put downs. Kate doesn't know what to make of Percy's two very different temperaments. Though her eyes are wide open after a violent act by Percy that couldn't be reasoned away. Jordan handles the abusive relationship aspect of this novel very well.

One of the things I loved about Bad Boy, is the authro stayed true to her main character. Kate still comes across as no nonsense with street and book smarts (earning straight A's) but she continues making poor choices in friends (Hot Girl) and her current boyfriend. Once again Kate and her situation are believable and realistic. This follow up can be read first but I would highly recommend starting with Hot Girl because its too good to miss.

The blurb on the front cover is by author Coe Booth and its a well deserved endorsement. Bad Boy is a must read for Booth fans. I know it would probably never happen but I would love for Kate and Booth's character Kendra to meet up in a short story. That would be awesome.

Kirkus Review

An excerpt

Friday, May 16, 2008

Up All Night - Various Authors


Up All Night is a collection of short stories by six awarding winning and best selling authors. Peter Abrahams Libba Bray, David Levithan, Patricia McCormick, Sarah Weeks and Gene Luen Yang. Growing up I didn't read many short stories. Its only in the last few years that I've begun to appreciate there beauty. Though if I had read Up All Night in high school, I'd have a bookshelf filled with short stories. I loved this collection and the titles were perfect. If a professor was teaching a course on writing short stories Up All Night could be on the sylabus. The writing was precise and staccato (and yes I know that's a music term I am using it anyway). I think it applies perfectly. A musician must play a staccato note short and sharp. If too long its loses its magic.

The same is true of a short story. A writers word choice must be short and sharp. There's no room for excess words, the body of the story comes too quickly. These six authors chose their words carefully, creating wonderful stories that easily pulled me in. The stories are not connected the only thing they have in common, the characters must stay up all night.

Peter Abrahams's Phase 2 is about two boys desire to protect their mother. In Libba Bray's Not Just for Breakfast Anymore four friends go to a concert. I love that Bray was able to give glimpses of each characters personality and the dynamics of their friendship. David Levithan's The Vulnerable Hours is about getting beyond the polite answer. Going in I thought Levithan's story would be technically the strongest (not the best mind you, that's always a matter of opinion.) because he is an editor. He proved me right, it was crazy cool what Levithan did blending what seem like two short stories together. Patricia McCormick's Orange Alert is about a girl who learns to drive. The last line is great and pure justice. McCormick fans should definitely read Orange Alert. I was pleasantly surprised by Sarah Weeks story Superman is Dead. At the end I expected one thing, Weeks gave me something much better. Gene Luen Yang's The Motherless One is about a monkey's search for his mother.

There is no weak link with this collection. Usually when I write about a book I've enjoyed I'll share some lines, this time I won't. Each word means so much, I don't want to ruin the surprises for the next reader.